Start Here: William Faulkner

Start Here: William Faulkner

When BOOKRIOT announced that William Faulkner was going to be featured in START HERE – their upcoming guide on how to “Read Your Way Into 25 Amazing Authors” it was as if someone had stabbed me in the heart repeatedly with the eraser side of a pencil. Just a little too close to home. Every reader has a favorite author – William Cuthbert Faulkner happens to be mine. Actually “obsession” would be more accurate. Good friends buy me copies of 1950’s pulps of his novels. I once spent the better part of a 5 hour ride to Pittsburgh debating his attitude towards race. I’ve had a surprising number of conversations in bars with complete strangers about Absalom, Absalom! and Go Down Moses. I also own not one, but two copies of Cleanth Brooks: William Faulkner The Yoknapatawpha Country. AND lastly, I’ve the bad habit of judgingany author writing in the English language based on how he holds up against the Duke of Oxford, Mississippi.

Comparisons made over the years have included (but have by no means been limited to) –

ANYWAY! Am I going to waste your time with plot summaries? Family trees? Discussions of stream-of-conscious writing? Hell no! (That’s what Wikipedia is for). Instead I drew you a pretty picture. Below is my map of the backroads into Mr. William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County.

Permission to use your map of the backroads of Yoknapatawpha County for an online class I’m taking. I really would love to share this with the class, but don’t want to do so without permission. Did I say how much I love the graphic? It is awesome!

Actually, the class is about evaluating online classes and trying to make the expectations clear to a high school English student. I thought your graphic depicted the confusion that many of these kids feel trying to follow what the online course expects of them. And since it is a class, I wanted to get permission first. Thanks!

Ahh, don’t sell high school-ers short – I read Sound & The Fury my junior year on my own (well, I actually approached a teacher to help me figure out what the heck was going on!). And who doesn’t love “A Rose for Emily”? 🙂 Good luck!